William H. Willimon - "The Gracious Dream" (September 8, 1991)
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Transcript
Transcripts may contain inaccuracies.
| (organ music) | 0:00 | |
| - | Good morning and welcome to this opening Sunday service | 0:52 |
| here in the chapel. | 0:56 | |
| We're delighted to have the students back with us | 0:58 | |
| from summer vacations, and are glad to have all with us, | 1:01 | |
| in particularly our visitors. | 1:04 | |
| You will note the wide array of activities available | 1:07 | |
| here at the chapel, the tear out sheet. | 1:11 | |
| Please fill that out | 1:14 | |
| with your areas of interest and service. | 1:15 | |
| Remind you that there is still time to audition | 1:19 | |
| for the Duke Chapel choir. | 1:23 | |
| This week begins our evening, | 1:27 | |
| or late afternoon, prayer services. | 1:30 | |
| This year, we're going to have a service at 5:15 | 1:32 | |
| on Tuesdays here in the chapel. | 1:35 | |
| The Taize prayer service, and then we will also continue | 1:38 | |
| our Thursday evening choral Vespers. | 1:43 | |
| I'd like to ask our musicians to come forward. | 1:48 | |
| One of the very special things about life here at the chapel | 1:51 | |
| is this glorious music. | 1:55 | |
| And we have a wonderful team of talented people | 1:57 | |
| who help us to produce this music. | 1:59 | |
| You've heard Sam Hammond this morning, | 2:02 | |
| our university carillonneur, | 2:05 | |
| as he played as we were arriving at the chapel. | 2:07 | |
| Sam is often an invisible musician, | 2:10 | |
| because he's perched up in the tower at the carrillon, | 2:15 | |
| but he's deeply appreciated. | 2:18 | |
| Norman Ryan is our curator of chapel organs. | 2:20 | |
| He works full-time around the chapel | 2:25 | |
| to keep our great organs tuned. | 2:28 | |
| He's currently conducting a massive renovation | 2:31 | |
| of our large front organ. | 2:34 | |
| Back at the back of the Aeolian is Robert Parkins, | 2:37 | |
| the university organ, excuse me, back at the Flentrop. | 2:41 | |
| He plays the Flentrop for our Sunday services. | 2:44 | |
| David Arcus is the Duke Chapel organist. | 2:48 | |
| He accompanies the choir, | 2:52 | |
| and is normally up here at the front organ. | 2:54 | |
| Donna Sparks is our assisting conductor at Duke Chapel, | 2:58 | |
| the Duke Chapel Choir. | 3:05 | |
| She always also leads the Thursday afternoon choral Vespers, | 3:06 | |
| and this is all under the leadership of Dr. Rodney Wynkoop, | 3:11 | |
| our director of the chapel music | 3:16 | |
| and director of university choral activities. | 3:21 | |
| Dr. Wynkoop spent his summer in Brazil | 3:24 | |
| working with community choirs in Brazil | 3:27 | |
| at a wonderful summer there, | 3:30 | |
| and we welcome all of these musicians back. | 3:33 | |
| We thank them for what they give us every Sunday. | 3:36 | |
| And now let us stand as we continue to worship God. | 3:41 | |
| Let me mention one more announcement. | 3:50 | |
| The chapel is collecting food and clothing | 3:53 | |
| and financial donations for the victims | 3:56 | |
| of the chicken plant fire in Hamlet, North Carolina. | 3:59 | |
| We have boxes downstairs that during the week | 4:04 | |
| you can bring canned goods and food. | 4:07 | |
| We welcome financial contributions. | 4:10 | |
| Please designate your contribution | 4:13 | |
| for the victims of the terrible fire, | 4:15 | |
| and all of this will be taken to Hamlet on this Friday. | 4:19 | |
| I wanted to call that to your attention. | 4:24 | |
| The grace of the Lord, Jesus Christ, be with you. | 4:27 | |
| Congregation | And also with you. | 4:31 |
| - | The risen Christ is with us. | 4:33 |
| Congregation | Thanks be to God. | 4:35 |
| (instrumental music) | 4:38 | |
| (Choir and Congregation singing) | 5:10 | |
| (organ music) | 7:47 | |
| (brass and percussion music) | 9:02 | |
| (Choir and Congregation singing) | 9:14 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 10:34 |
| Open our hearts and minds, O God, | 10:37 | |
| by the power of your Holy Spirit, | 10:41 | |
| so that as word is read and proclaimed, | 10:44 | |
| we might hear with joy what you say to us this day. | 10:48 | |
| Amen. | 10:52 | |
| The first reading is taken from the book of Genesis. | 10:56 | |
| Jacob left Beer-sheba and went toward Haran. | 11:03 | |
| He came to a certain place and stayed there for the night, | 11:08 | |
| because the sun had set. | 11:12 | |
| Taking one of the stones of the place, | 11:14 | |
| he put it under his head and lay down in that place. | 11:17 | |
| And he dreamed that there was a ladder set up on the earth, | 11:23 | |
| the top of it reaching to heaven; | 11:29 | |
| and the angels of God were ascending and descending on it. | 11:32 | |
| And the Lord stood beside him and said, | 11:38 | |
| "I am the Lord, the God of Abraham your father | 11:41 | |
| and the God of Isaac; | 11:47 | |
| the land on which you lie | 11:49 | |
| I will give to you and to your offspring; | 11:50 | |
| and your offspring shall be like the dust of the earth, | 11:54 | |
| and you shall spread abroad to the west and to the east | 11:58 | |
| and the families of the earth | 12:04 | |
| shall be blessed in you and in your offspring. | 12:06 | |
| Know that I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, | 12:10 | |
| and will bring you back to this land; | 12:15 | |
| for I will not leave you | 12:18 | |
| until I have done what I have promised you." | 12:21 | |
| Then Jacob woke from his sleep and said, | 12:25 | |
| "Surely the Lord is in this place-and I did not know it!" | 12:27 | |
| And he was afraid, and said, "How awesome is this place! | 12:33 | |
| "There is none other than the house of God, | 12:39 | |
| "and this is the gate of heaven." | 12:42 | |
| This is the Word of the Lord. | 12:46 | |
| - | [Janet And Congregation] Thanks be to God. | 12:49 |
| - | Today's Psalm is found on page 843. | 12:56 |
| Let us stand and read responsively. | 12:59 | |
| Sing responsively. | 13:02 | |
| (organ playing) | 13:05 | |
| - | ♪ Your testimonies are wonderful, ♪ | 13:10 |
| ♪therefore my soul keeps them.♪ | 13:14 | |
| (Congregation singing response) | 13:19 | |
| ♪ - With open mouth I pant ♪ | 13:29 | |
| ♪ because I long for your commandments.♪ | 13:32 | |
| (Congregation singing response) | 13:37 | |
| - | ♪Keep steady my steps according to your promise, ♪ | 13:47 |
| ♪ And let no iniquity get dominion over me. ♪ | 13:52 | |
| (Congregation singing response) | 13:58 | |
| - | ♪Make your face shine upon your servant ♪ | 14:07 |
| ♪and teach me your statutes.♪ | 14:10 | |
| (Congregation singing response) | 14:13 | |
| (organ music) | 14:24 | |
| (Choir and Congregation singing) | 14:35 | |
| - | The Epistle lesson is taken from the book of James. | 15:40 |
| Every generous act of giving, with every perfect gift, | 15:45 | |
| is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, | 15:51 | |
| with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change. | 15:56 | |
| In fulfillment of his own purpose | 16:01 | |
| he gave us birth by the word of truth, | 16:04 | |
| so that we would become a kind of first fruits | 16:07 | |
| of his creatures. | 16:10 | |
| But be doers of the word, | 16:12 | |
| and not merely hearers who deceive themselves, | 16:15 | |
| For if any are hearers of the word and not doers, | 16:18 | |
| they are like those who look at themselves in a mirror; | 16:23 | |
| for they look at themselves and, on going away, | 16:26 | |
| immediately forget what they were like. | 16:29 | |
| But those who look into the perfect law, the law of liberty, | 16:34 | |
| and persevere, being not hearers who forget | 16:38 | |
| but doers who act-they will be blessed in their doing. | 16:43 | |
| If any think they are religious, | 16:48 | |
| and do not bridle their tongues but deceive their hearts, | 16:51 | |
| their religion is worthless. | 16:56 | |
| Religion that is pure and undefiled | 16:59 | |
| before God, the Father, is this: | 17:01 | |
| to care for orphans and widows in their distress, | 17:04 | |
| and to keep oneself unstained by the world. | 17:08 | |
| This is the Word of the Lord. | 17:14 | |
| Congregation | Thanks be to God. | 17:17 |
| - | This reading is taken | 17:21 |
| from the Gospel according to Saint Mark. | 17:23 | |
| Then he returned from the region of Tyre | 17:26 | |
| and went by way Sidon towards the Sea of Galilee, | 17:29 | |
| in the region of the Decapolis. | 17:33 | |
| They brought to him a deaf man | 17:38 | |
| who had an impediment in his speech, | 17:41 | |
| and they begged him to lay his hand on him. | 17:43 | |
| He took him aside in private, away from the crowds, | 17:48 | |
| and put His fingers into his ears, | 17:52 | |
| and He spat and touched his tongue. | 17:55 | |
| Then, looking up to heaven, he sighed and said to him, | 17:59 | |
| "Ephphatha," that is, "Be opened." | 18:03 | |
| And immediately his ears were opened, | 18:09 | |
| his tongue was released, and he spoke plainly. | 18:11 | |
| Then Jesus ordered them to tell no one. | 18:15 | |
| But the more he ordered them, | 18:18 | |
| the more zealously they proclaimed it. | 18:21 | |
| They were astounded beyond measure, saying, | 18:24 | |
| "He has done everything well. | 18:27 | |
| "He even makes the deaf to hear and the mute to speak." | 18:30 | |
| This is the Word of the Lord. | 18:35 | |
| Congregation | Thanks be to God. | 18:38 |
| (organ music) | 18:41 | |
| (Choir singing in Latin) | 19:03 | |
| - | Jacob left Beer-sheba and went toward Haran, | 22:58 |
| and then he came to a certain place | 23:03 | |
| and stayed there for the night, | 23:06 | |
| because the sun had set. | 23:08 | |
| Taking one of the stones of the place, | 23:10 | |
| he laid it under his head, and he laid down in that place. | 23:13 | |
| And, and he dreamed. | 23:17 | |
| And he dreamed that there was a ladder | 23:21 | |
| set up on the earth, the top of it reaching to heaven. | 23:24 | |
| And the angels of God were ascending and descending on it. | 23:28 | |
| And the Lord stood beside him and said, | 23:32 | |
| "I am the Lord. | 23:39 | |
| "The God of Abraham, your father, and the God of Isaac. | 23:41 | |
| "The land on which you lie, | 23:47 | |
| "I will give to you and to your offspring. | 23:49 | |
| "And your offspring shall be like the dust of the earth, | 23:51 | |
| "and spread abroad to the west and to the east, | 23:55 | |
| "and to the north and to the south, | 23:57 | |
| "and all the families of the earth | 24:00 | |
| "shall be blessed in you and in your offspring. | 24:02 | |
| "Know that I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, | 24:06 | |
| "and will bring you back to this land. | 24:13 | |
| "For I will not leave you | 24:16 | |
| "until I have done what I have promised you." | 24:17 | |
| And then Jacob awoke from his sleep and said, | 24:21 | |
| "Surely the Lord is in this place and I did not know it." | 24:25 | |
| He was afraid, and said, "How awesome is this place? | 24:30 | |
| "This is none other than the house of God, | 24:35 | |
| "and this is the gate of heaven." | 24:39 | |
| Thanks be to God. | 24:45 | |
| - | We were having this Bible study | 24:57 |
| on the book of Acts, chapter eight, | 24:59 | |
| where Phillip is accosted by an angel | 25:02 | |
| that's got a message from God. | 25:05 | |
| And she spoke up and said, | 25:08 | |
| "Angels, these angels, I've never seen an angel. | 25:10 | |
| "And I don't know anybody else that's ever seen an angel. | 25:15 | |
| "What are we modern people to do with these Bible angels?" | 25:18 | |
| And in response I told her about how I had spent my day | 25:24 | |
| just the day before. | 25:27 | |
| Early in the morning, this woman had come to see me. | 25:30 | |
| She was a Duke student, and she told me how, | 25:33 | |
| after many months of consideration, | 25:35 | |
| she was quite surprised to find that she was considering | 25:38 | |
| going into seminary to become a pastor. | 25:45 | |
| "Now why would God want me to do this?" She asked. | 25:49 | |
| I said, "Well, you work well with people, | 25:53 | |
| "you're warm, open, caring." | 25:56 | |
| She said, "Yes, but I'm a biology major." | 25:57 | |
| I said, "I don't know. | 26:00 | |
| "I don't know what God's up to here." | 26:02 | |
| That afternoon I got a call from another Duke student, | 26:05 | |
| said he had to see me that very afternoon. | 26:09 | |
| I said, "Come over." | 26:11 | |
| We met about 5:00 and he told me this long story | 26:13 | |
| about all the long circuitous twists and turns | 26:17 | |
| in his life up to that point, | 26:19 | |
| and how that he had at last, | 26:22 | |
| after much struggle and sleepless nights, | 26:24 | |
| he had come to the conclusion that God was speaking to him. | 26:26 | |
| That God was telling him | 26:32 | |
| to forsake the career path that he had planned, | 26:34 | |
| and to go out and to work with the poor. | 26:37 | |
| I got away from that conversation | 26:42 | |
| in time to go this fancy restaurant | 26:45 | |
| to meet with this search committee I was on. | 26:47 | |
| We were having a candidate come in | 26:49 | |
| from somewhere in the Midwest. | 26:51 | |
| We got seated at the table. | 26:54 | |
| The waiter came to the table, taking people's orders. | 26:55 | |
| He got to me and he said, "Hey. | 26:58 | |
| "I bet you, you're a preacher, aren't you?" | 27:01 | |
| Well there was giggling around the table. | 27:05 | |
| There were inappropriate remarks. | 27:07 | |
| This was a medical center group. | 27:08 | |
| And I said, "Maybe you've seen the Duke Chapel program | 27:10 | |
| "in the afternoon on Sundays?" | 27:17 | |
| He said, "No, no, you just look like one." | 27:18 | |
| And I get this waiter away, and get the... | 27:21 | |
| We went on with the meal, | 27:26 | |
| about 10:00 we were leaving the restaurant, | 27:28 | |
| as we were going out someone says, "Wait, wait!" | 27:30 | |
| And it was this waiter running after me. | 27:33 | |
| I said, "Look, these medical center people | 27:35 | |
| "were supposed to get the bill, I--" | 27:37 | |
| (congregation laughs) | 27:39 | |
| - | He said, "No! | 27:41 |
| "I just wanted to ask you. | 27:43 | |
| "I think God is calling me into divinity school. | 27:44 | |
| "I wonder if you could suggest a good divinity school. | 27:47 | |
| "Somebody Baptist, maybe?" | 27:50 | |
| Well can you see why on the next day | 27:54 | |
| when I was asked about angels | 27:55 | |
| I said, "Look. | 27:59 | |
| "They're busy just now. | 28:01 | |
| "If you'll take a number, sit down over there, | 28:04 | |
| "they'll get to you when they can. | 28:07 | |
| "They're busy calling biology majors into the ministry. | 28:08 | |
| "They're tormenting Duke sophomores. | 28:12 | |
| "They're calling waiters. | 28:13 | |
| "They've been real busy just now." | 28:16 | |
| Of course you and I live in a place | 28:22 | |
| where we don't expect much divine communication. | 28:24 | |
| In the universe in which we move, | 28:30 | |
| there appears to be a scarcity of divine messages. | 28:34 | |
| I don't spend every day talking to people | 28:40 | |
| who received some message from God. | 28:44 | |
| I mean, this is a university, after all. | 28:47 | |
| In fact, one wonders, what would we do | 28:50 | |
| if God ever had a message for one of us? | 28:52 | |
| "Reverend Willimon this is Public Safety. | 28:58 | |
| "We're over here in the dormitory, | 29:02 | |
| "we've got this guy, says his name is Gabriel. | 29:03 | |
| "Got this, he's dressed, | 29:07 | |
| "he's got this white robe on, his wings, | 29:08 | |
| "and we caught him trying to break in to Alspaugh 102. | 29:12 | |
| "You want us to bust him?" | 29:16 | |
| Well last week, we were introduced | 29:22 | |
| to the Biblical story of Jacob. | 29:24 | |
| Little brother, Jacob. | 29:27 | |
| You remember? | 29:29 | |
| His name means, "heel" or "grabber," | 29:30 | |
| referring to the circumstances of his birth. | 29:34 | |
| And as the story goes on about Jacob, | 29:38 | |
| we find that he is not called grabber for nothing, | 29:40 | |
| since he duped his poor old brother Esau | 29:44 | |
| out of his birthright. | 29:48 | |
| Jacob has been very busy with his schemes and his plans, | 29:50 | |
| and his deceit. | 29:55 | |
| Now, with his poor father Isaac blind and on his death bed, | 29:58 | |
| Jacob dresses up in sheep's clothing, | 30:04 | |
| so that when the old man stretches out to bless, | 30:07 | |
| he will bless smooth-skinned little brother Jacob, | 30:11 | |
| thinking that he is really giving his blessing | 30:17 | |
| to hairy Esau. | 30:19 | |
| And so Jacob gets every cent of the inheritance | 30:24 | |
| that should have gone to his brother. | 30:28 | |
| And that's sort of the way Jacob has made it in the world | 30:32 | |
| up to this point, by hook and by crook. | 30:34 | |
| Liking nothing better than to put one over | 30:37 | |
| on poor dumb Esau. | 30:40 | |
| "Here, Esau. | 30:41 | |
| "Take a card, any card." | 30:42 | |
| So Esau, Esau says, "After Dad's funeral, | 30:47 | |
| "I am going to murder that little shyster." | 30:52 | |
| And can we blame him? | 30:55 | |
| Well, Jacob, sort of person who always lands on both feet, | 31:00 | |
| gets word of Esau's plans, | 31:05 | |
| and he slips out of the back door of the funeral home | 31:07 | |
| as the service is ending. | 31:10 | |
| And he is now a fugitive, an exile, | 31:14 | |
| he's on the lamb, and it's ironic. | 31:17 | |
| Jacob, who had wanted, wanted more than anything, | 31:21 | |
| to have it all, who had dreamed | 31:23 | |
| of having the whole inheritance for himself, | 31:26 | |
| to be number one in the world, | 31:28 | |
| and have Esau spend the rest of his life waxing his Porsche, | 31:30 | |
| here is Jacob now, out, way out, | 31:35 | |
| this is where our scripture today takes place. | 31:38 | |
| He is out nowhere, between Haran and Beer-sheba. | 31:42 | |
| Alone, vulnerable, without protection from family. | 31:48 | |
| Banished. | 31:54 | |
| In Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, | 31:56 | |
| he tells us what this banishment means. | 31:59 | |
| "Banishment, oh be merciful. | 32:02 | |
| "Say death. | 32:04 | |
| "For exile hath more terrors in his look than death. | 32:06 | |
| "Do not say banished. | 32:13 | |
| "Banished is death misturned." | 32:14 | |
| It's just like he's died. | 32:17 | |
| He's out there in the midst of the wilderness, alone. | 32:19 | |
| Out in the dark, | 32:25 | |
| wild beasts roam, and Jacob prepares for sleep | 32:27 | |
| with nothing but a stone for his pillow. | 32:32 | |
| The sleep of the exiled, | 32:38 | |
| we would expect to be a restless sleep. | 32:40 | |
| Alone, vulnerable, out nowhere, noplace. | 32:43 | |
| Have any of you ever slept like Jacob? | 32:48 | |
| The restless sleep of the exile? | 32:50 | |
| With nothing but a stone for your pillow? | 32:54 | |
| Nowhere, somewhere between Aycock and Jarvis, alone. | 32:57 | |
| It's a story about that. | 33:01 | |
| And now with his defenses down, | 33:04 | |
| with all of his tricks having been played, | 33:06 | |
| this striver, this grabber, | 33:09 | |
| Jacob sleeps. | 33:14 | |
| He sleeps like a baby and has a dream. | 33:18 | |
| We've sung about it when we were kids at summer camp. | 33:24 | |
| We are climbing Jacob's ladder. | 33:27 | |
| We are climbing Jacob's ladder. | 33:28 | |
| Every round goes higher, higher. | 33:30 | |
| We are climbing Jacob's ladder. | 33:33 | |
| Freud noted that one of the functions of dreams | 33:38 | |
| appears to be a sort of dredging up from our unconscious | 33:41 | |
| of painful, difficult memories in our past. | 33:45 | |
| That when we close our eyes, they bubble up | 33:51 | |
| out of our unconscious. | 33:54 | |
| Well if Freud was right, then there must, | 33:57 | |
| there should have been enough | 33:59 | |
| raunchy memories, | 34:03 | |
| enough pain and regret, for Jacob to have dreamed | 34:06 | |
| a three-movie flight that night. | 34:09 | |
| But recall, this is Jacob. | 34:13 | |
| Regret over the past, for how he's duped his father | 34:17 | |
| and bamboozled his brother, forget it. | 34:21 | |
| This is Jacob. | 34:25 | |
| He sleeps like a baby, | 34:26 | |
| and then he has these technicolor dreams. | 34:28 | |
| A great ladder, really in the Hebrew, a staircase, a ramp, | 34:33 | |
| is let down from heaven right to the place | 34:38 | |
| where Jacob sleeps. | 34:41 | |
| And angels of God are ascending and | 34:44 | |
| descending on that great ladder. | 34:49 | |
| Angels, these winged creatures, | 34:54 | |
| they have wings so they can take messages | 34:56 | |
| back and forth from Earth to Heaven, | 34:57 | |
| from Heaven to Earth. | 34:59 | |
| They are ascending and descending, | 35:02 | |
| would you note in the story, this is a two-way staircase. | 35:05 | |
| These messengers are not only carrying messages | 35:11 | |
| from Earth up to Heaven, but they are carrying messages | 35:15 | |
| from Heaven down to Earth. | 35:20 | |
| And here, I think we note, that most of our dreaming | 35:25 | |
| is a mostly one-way street. | 35:31 | |
| We, spending our lives trying to get an angel | 35:35 | |
| to carry our message up to God, listen to us pray, | 35:39 | |
| "Oh God, get me, give me, make me." | 35:43 | |
| The conventional high school commencement address | 35:49 | |
| often speaks of dreams. | 35:52 | |
| High school graduates will be told, | 35:55 | |
| "Get a dream and stick beside it." | 35:57 | |
| Robert Kennedy will be quoted: | 35:59 | |
| "Some look at the world and ask why? | 36:01 | |
| "I dream of a world that is not yet and ask, why not?" | 36:04 | |
| And yet, by your sophomore year of college, | 36:12 | |
| when you ponder the meaning of these high school speeches, | 36:14 | |
| you're bewildered to find | 36:21 | |
| that even the very grandest of our dreams | 36:22 | |
| are still our dreams. | 36:28 | |
| They are nothing much more | 36:31 | |
| than the grandest of human wishes writ large. | 36:34 | |
| Walt Disney's Cinderella says, | 36:41 | |
| a dream is what your heart wishes when you're fast asleep. | 36:44 | |
| Our best dreams are just these projections of ourselves. | 36:52 | |
| Ourselves wanting to be more, for sure, | 36:59 | |
| but still ourselves just as we are. | 37:02 | |
| We can only hope to achieve such dreams, | 37:06 | |
| not to be transformed by them. | 37:10 | |
| Our dreams, be they the dreams here at Duke, | 37:13 | |
| or any other dream that we have, tend to be ladders. | 37:19 | |
| Ladders by which we pull ourselves up by ourselves, | 37:23 | |
| higher, higher, high school, college, graduate school, | 37:27 | |
| higher, one step at a time, up, up, we go, by ourselves. | 37:31 | |
| So that's why I want you to note | 37:39 | |
| that in this dream in the story, this ladder, | 37:40 | |
| stretched from Heaven to Earth. | 37:43 | |
| That there are angels descending the ladder. | 37:47 | |
| See, Jacob already had a dream. | 37:54 | |
| We've been hearing about that dream | 37:57 | |
| ever since Jacob was conceived. | 37:59 | |
| The dream that he would be number one, | 38:02 | |
| and older brother would be nothing. | 38:04 | |
| The dream that he would be set up, | 38:06 | |
| he would have all the family inheritance, | 38:08 | |
| and he would be set up, | 38:10 | |
| and poor, dumb, Esau would be serving him. | 38:14 | |
| It is a dream not unknown to those of us | 38:19 | |
| who get, and climb, and achieve. | 38:22 | |
| We know that dream. | 38:26 | |
| But if you'll note in the story that there were angels | 38:30 | |
| descending that ladder as well. | 38:33 | |
| So that in the words of Tom Long, | 38:38 | |
| that night Jacob has a dream | 38:41 | |
| that God, in his dream, | 38:45 | |
| has him. | 38:50 | |
| And God tells Jacob that night, | 38:54 | |
| "I am not gonna let you go until I am finished with you." | 38:56 | |
| Jacob is a dreamer. | 39:03 | |
| But surprise, so is God. | 39:07 | |
| Now it takes a while for God's dream | 39:13 | |
| to take effect in Jacob's life, | 39:15 | |
| 'cause he awakes, | 39:19 | |
| and after being promised in this glorious dream | 39:20 | |
| of God's steadfast commitment to him, | 39:22 | |
| Jacob awakes and says to God, | 39:25 | |
| "Okay, God. | 39:27 | |
| "If you will keep me, if you will protect me, | 39:29 | |
| "if you will keep me and clothe me, | 39:32 | |
| "if you will give me land, then I'll let you be my God. | 39:34 | |
| "Take a card, God. | 39:39 | |
| "Any card." | 39:41 | |
| Is there no limits to this guy's graspingness? | 39:44 | |
| Well, we shall see, because it's going to be | 39:49 | |
| another night beside a dark river, | 39:52 | |
| when Jacob shall be encountered | 39:54 | |
| not by dreams of angels, | 39:56 | |
| but by the hammer hold grip of a God | 40:00 | |
| determined not to let Jacob go | 40:03 | |
| until he has had his way with him. | 40:05 | |
| But that's another story for another Sunday. | 40:10 | |
| Today, today let us simply note | 40:15 | |
| that there is a bold claim being made | 40:19 | |
| in the story of Jacob and his ladder. | 40:22 | |
| There is a bold life-changing cosmic claim being made here. | 40:25 | |
| A claim that intrudes itself into our flattened world, | 40:32 | |
| this supremely self-confident, secular place | 40:36 | |
| of mostly one-way communication. | 40:40 | |
| That claim? | 40:45 | |
| There is business between Heaven and Earth. | 40:49 | |
| We're not abandoned. | 40:56 | |
| Even the worst of us, | 40:58 | |
| even the most morally questioned of us, | 41:00 | |
| this is a story about Jacob, after all. | 41:01 | |
| And even the most deserted, confused, | 41:04 | |
| alone places in our lives, we are not abandoned. | 41:06 | |
| There is business to be worked out between God and us. | 41:10 | |
| You see, the old song that we learned in children | 41:16 | |
| doesn't tell it all, does it? | 41:18 | |
| We are climbing Jacob's ladder. | 41:23 | |
| We are climbing, we. | 41:25 | |
| No. | 41:28 | |
| This is a two-way thoroughfare that night. | 41:30 | |
| Our dreams, even the very best of our dreams | 41:34 | |
| that cause us to work and study and achieve at Duke, | 41:37 | |
| these dreams are subject to divine intrusion | 41:42 | |
| and subversion. | 41:46 | |
| So that at times our lives may be disrupted and reoriented | 41:50 | |
| to God's dreams. | 41:56 | |
| We're sending our messages to God. | 42:00 | |
| Well, surprise, God is also sending messages to us. | 42:03 | |
| So that it just may be, I warned you here, | 42:10 | |
| that you're out some night in some dingy dorm room, | 42:15 | |
| it's dark, it's late, you're alone, | 42:18 | |
| with nothing but a stone for a pillow. | 42:21 | |
| And we, who are so accustomed to doing all the talking, | 42:27 | |
| we get a message. | 42:32 | |
| A message from God. | 42:36 | |
| I am with you. | 42:39 | |
| I will keep you. | 42:41 | |
| I've got plans for you. | 42:43 | |
| I will bring you home. | 42:47 | |
| And we awake. | 42:50 | |
| Well it's still Gilbert Adams. | 42:52 | |
| It's Monday, but now we're different. | 42:54 | |
| We've been surprised that even unto us | 42:58 | |
| the word has become flesh and dwelt among us. | 43:02 | |
| Or, as Jacob said, "Huh. | 43:11 | |
| "The Lord was in this place, | 43:16 | |
| and I didn't even know it!" | 43:20 | |
| (organ music) | 43:27 | |
| (Choir and Congregation singing) | 44:07 | |
| - | You may be seated. | 46:50 |
| Let us pray now together the litany for this year | 46:56 | |
| in the university. | 47:00 | |
| God of Abraham and Isaac, of apostles and prophets, | 47:02 | |
| in every age, you call people to work for you, | 47:06 | |
| showing justice, doing mercy, | 47:11 | |
| giving purpose to an aimless humanity. | 47:14 | |
| By your truth, darkness is dispelled, | 47:18 | |
| and all people set free to mature in wisdom. | 47:22 | |
| In pursuit of that truth, | 47:26 | |
| we now take our place at Duke University. | 47:28 | |
| Receive us into yourself, oh God, | 47:32 | |
| use us to accomplish your sacred intention. | 47:35 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 47:39 | |
| That in this place, we will remember those | 47:41 | |
| parents, teachers, and friends who love us, | 47:44 | |
| and whose hopes follow us here. | 47:49 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 47:51 | |
| That we may accept the responsibility of our freedom | 47:54 | |
| and the burden of our privilege. | 47:58 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 48:01 | |
| That with courage, we may doubt, | 48:03 | |
| but that we will also place our doubts in the larger faith | 48:05 | |
| of Jesus Christ. | 48:09 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 48:11 | |
| From insulating ourselves with books and words. | 48:14 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 48:17 | |
| From ignorance that heeds injustice, | 48:20 | |
| from indifference that yields to cruelty, | 48:23 | |
| and from blind loyalty to false values. | 48:27 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 48:31 | |
| From hopelessness that cripples us, | 48:33 | |
| a self-consciousness that paralyzes us, | 48:36 | |
| and from temptations that destroy us. | 48:39 | |
| (Congregation responds) | 48:43 | |
| Gracious God, in a world where justice | 48:45 | |
| does not yet roll down as waters, | 48:49 | |
| nor righteousness as a mighty stream, | 48:52 | |
| where there is much knowledge but little wisdom, | 48:54 | |
| we pray for this school, its students and faculty, | 48:58 | |
| staff, and administrators, | 49:02 | |
| and for the task in which we now unite. | 49:05 | |
| Turn our efforts to good, | 49:08 | |
| that as our understanding increases, | 49:10 | |
| our responsibility will deepen. | 49:13 | |
| For the sake of the future that you give us to create, | 49:16 | |
| hear us, oh God. | 49:20 | |
| Amen. | 49:23 | |
| Now our offerings honor God, | 49:26 | |
| who has entrusted the Earth's resources | 49:28 | |
| to our care and keeping. | 49:31 | |
| Through the act of giving, our personal priorities | 49:33 | |
| and congregational commitments | 49:36 | |
| are held up to the mirror of eternal values. | 49:38 | |
| Let us give as we have been blessed, | 49:42 | |
| and spend our resources that lives may be healed | 49:45 | |
| in Christ's name. | 49:48 | |
| (organ music) | 49:54 | |
| (brass and percussion music) | 50:23 | |
| (Choir singing) | 51:03 | |
| (Choir and Congregation singing) | 56:41 | |
| - | Let us pray. | 57:37 |
| God of all majesty and glory, | 57:39 | |
| receive our outpouring of love, | 57:42 | |
| in these gifts and in our renewed commitment | 57:46 | |
| to your purposes. | 57:50 | |
| For all the beauty in nature and people | 57:52 | |
| that you have provided, give thanks. | 57:55 | |
| May riches of understanding abound the more we give. | 57:59 | |
| And treasures of wisdom flow through us, | 58:04 | |
| this university, and your church, | 58:07 | |
| to enlighten a troubled and needy world. | 58:10 | |
| In Jesus' name, we pray together, | 58:14 | |
| Congregation | Our Father, who art in heaven, | 58:18 |
| hallowed be thy name. | 58:21 | |
| Thy kingdom come, thy will be done, | 58:22 | |
| on earth as it is in heaven. | 58:25 | |
| Give us this day our daily bread, | 58:28 | |
| and forgive us our trespasses, | 58:31 | |
| as we forgive those who trespass against us. | 58:33 | |
| Lead us not into temptation, | 58:37 | |
| but deliver us from evil. | 58:39 | |
| For thine is the kingdom, and the power, | 58:41 | |
| and the glory forever. | 58:44 | |
| Amen. | 58:46 | |
| - | And now, may the grace of our Lord, Jesus Christ, | 58:49 |
| and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit | 58:52 | |
| be with you all. | 58:56 | |
| Choir | ♪ Amen, amen, amen, amen.♪ | 59:01 |
| (brass instruments playing) | 59:39 | |
| (organ playing) | 1:00:05 | |
| (Congregation and Choir singing) | 1:00:35 |
Item Info
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